| |
Back to Index
Reporters sans frontières Annual Report 2007: Zimbabwe
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
February 01, 2007
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=20744
The country headed since
1980 by the now octogenarian Robert Mugabe is one of most vicious
on the continent in its treatment of journalists. Surveillance,
threats, imprisonment, censorship blackmail, abuse of power and
denial of justice are all brought to bear to keep firm control over
the news. Things have got so bad that the Zimbabwean justice system,
zealously guarding its prerogatives and tired of not being respected,
has started to disavow the government and its agencies.
Keeping absolute
control over the news, whatever the cost, is an obvious obsession
of Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe. Ever since 2002, when the
government pushed through one of the most Kafkaesque press laws
on the continent, closed down the leading daily in the country and
jammed opposition radio, it has never let up pressure against the
few surviving independent voices in the country. Thanks to the dreaded
Media and Information Commission (MIC), it was able to crackdown
in 2006 on privately-owned weeklies Zimbabwe Independent, Financial
Gazette (FinGaz) and the Voice
of the People (VOP). The intelligence services made themselves
responsible for all other forms of injustice meted out to Zimbabwe’s
journalists.
Relentless
struggle
In
line with its statutory responsibility, the media regulation body,
the MIC, which tightly controls the media for the government, every
year sets about re-examining newspaper licences and accreditations
for journalists. Ready to use blackmail, from the first week of
January 2006, the MIC suspended the publication licence of FinGaz,
unless it carried a denial of an article which it published the
previous week about how the commission, after deciding to award
a licence to the owner of the defunct Daily News, finally gave way
to pressure from the intelligence services and reversed its decision.
Likewise, on 2 February, the MIC finally renewed the accreditation
of journalists on the Zimbabwe Independent, only after forcing the
newspaper to publish a correction of an article which had appeared
the previous week.
The major preoccupation
of the MIC, chaired for life by Tafataona Mahoso, an old comrade
of the head of state, is clearly not the publication of the truth
or the protection of journalists. His stance is common knowledge.
Besides, the Zimbabwean justice system has recognised that the Commission
is incapable of judging certain cases fairly. Accordingly, on 8
February the Harare High Court, quashed an MIC decision to refuse
a licence to the publishing house of the Daily News and its supplement
the Daily News on Sunday, banned since 2003. The paper’s lawyers
had gone to court, arguing that the MIC chairman had refused to
withdraw in despite of a 2005 decision by the Supreme Court which
had ruled, for the first time, that he was biased. The High Court
judge in Harare said that the MIC decision had effectively been
biased, under the influence of the intelligence services, and that
the Commission should consequently review the licence application.
Boosted by these two legal decisions in its favour, the newspaper’s
publishing house on 28 March challenged the information and publicity
minister Tichaona Jokonya, so as to force the government to decide
on allowing publication, in the place of the disqualified MIC. But
the Zimbabwean government used every means from legal quibbles to
law breaking with impunity to delay making a decision. And, in fact,
no decision has yet been made.
The MIC has
therefore calmly continued its surveillance and punishment of discordant
voices. Its weapons of choice are: "calls for investigation"
into a particular journalist, threats to revoke licences or accreditation
and denouncing journalists to the police. Police raided one of the
distribution points in Harare of the privately-owned daily The Zimbabwean
on 3 October. Police took away a copy of the paper’s import authorisation
as well as copies of the previous week’s paper. The paper, one of
the country’s last independent dailies is published in the UK and
printed in South Africa, to get round draconian legislation on the
private press, of which the MIC is the tireless watchdog. The previous
week, the paper carried an article in which military sources spoke
out against corruption within the Zimbabwean police. A few days
earlier, on 1st October, Tafataona Mahoso called on the information
minister to investigate the Zimbabwean
Union of Journalists (ZUJ), on the grounds that it was fomenting
an "anti-Zimbabwe lobby". He claimed to be in possession
of a document drawn up by the ZUJ, asking for funds from the Netherlands
embassy and from UNESCO. At the same time, Mahoso also made an order
for an investigation of the ZUJ secretary in Mashonaland West province,
Nunurai Jena, accused of working for US public radio Voice of America
(VOA), based in Washington, without obtaining permission from the
MIC. On 28 September, the Commission virulently attacked the Zimbabwean
branch of the press freedom organisation the Media Institute of
Southern Africa (MISA-Zimbabwe), which he said, was backing "regime
change".
Resistance
from the justice system
But
the Zimbabwean justice system is increasingly resisting the abuse
of power by the government. On 25 September, the president of the
Harare court decided to refuse the prosecution a third adjournment
in the trial of privately-owned radio VOP. "This is turning
into a circus", he said, before deciding to drop charges against
the radio’s ten defendants. Board members Arnold Tsunga, Millie
Phiri, Isabella Matambanadzo, David Masunda, Nhlanhla Ngwenya, Lawrence
Chibwe and John Masuku, had been arrested in January 2006 for "possessing
and using broadcast equipment without permission". Radio staffers
Maria Nyanyiwa, Takunda Chigwanda and Nyasha Bosha, were held for
four days in December 2005 after a police search of the radio’s
offices in the centre of the capital.
As a result,
when legal recourse will not answer, the Zimbabwean government calls
on the army and in particular the powerful Central Intelligence
Organisation (CIO). Unable to have foreign-based staff arrested,
from the second half of June the government ordered jamming of the
VOA programme Studio 7 beamed into Zimbabwe. They are now blocked
with a rattling sound, identical to that which has been jamming
shortwave programmes since February 2005 on privately-owned SW Radio
Africa based in London and of Amsterdam-based VOP, since September
2005. According to information obtained by Reporters Without Borders
this jamming has been made possible by the presence in Harare of
Chinese experts invited to train their Zimbabwean telecommunications
and radio-communications counterparts under an economic and technical
cooperation agreement signed between the two countries.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|